Abstract

DNA polymerase η (pol η) synthesizes across from damaged DNA templates in order to prevent deleterious consequences like replication fork collapse and double-strand breaks. This process, termed translesion synthesis (TLS), is an overall positive for the cell, as cells deficient in pol η display higher mutation rates. This outcome occurs despite the fact that the in vitro fidelity of bypass by pol η alone is moderate to low, depending on the lesion being copied. One possible means of increasing the fidelity of pol η is interaction with replication accessory proteins present at the replication fork. We have previously utilized a bacteriophage based screening system to measure the fidelity of bypass using purified proteins. Here we report on the fidelity effects of a single stranded binding protein, replication protein A (RPA), when copying the oxidative lesion 7,8-dihydro-8-oxo-guanine(8-oxoG) and the UV-induced cis-syn thymine-thymine cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer (T-T CPD). We observed no change in fidelity dependent on RPA when copying these damaged templates. This result is consistent in multiple position contexts. We previously identified single amino acid substitution mutants of pol η that have specific effects on fidelity when copying both damaged and undamaged templates. In order to confirm our results, we examined the Q38A and Y52E mutants in the same full-length construct. We again observed no difference when RPA was added to the bypass reaction, with the mutant forms of pol η displaying similar fidelity regardless of RPA status. We do, however, observe some slight effects when copying undamaged DNA, similar to those we have described previously. Our results indicate that RPA by itself does not affect pol η dependent lesion bypass fidelity when copying either 8-oxoG or T-T CPD lesions.

Highlights

  • DNA replication in the presence of damaged bases requires specialized DNA polymerases in order to prevent more deleterious consequences caused by replicative polymerase stalling [1]

  • We have previously shown, using an assay that requires multiple incorporations of all four dNTPs, that bypass of 8-oxoG by human pol g occurs with very low fidelity, with dATP being stably misincorporated,50% of the time [8]

  • We demonstrated that the addition of replication protein A (RPA), replication factor C (RFC) and PCNA had no effect on the fidelity using the yeast forms of these proteins

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Summary

Introduction

DNA replication in the presence of damaged bases requires specialized DNA polymerases in order to prevent more deleterious consequences caused by replicative polymerase stalling [1]. Extensive use of this assay and template sequence previously using only polymerase allows us to make a direct comparison of the ability of RPA to modify the fidelity of lesion bypass by human pol g.

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